
A new analysis suggests that vitamin D intake from foods was associated with some cardioprotective effects.
According to the authors, the analysis “aimed to evaluate the association between dietary vitamin D intake and 10‐year first fatal/nonfatal cardiovascular disease (CVD), conventional CVD risk factors and surrogate markers related to inflammation, coagulation, insulin resistance, liver and renal function.”
Published in the Journal of Human Nutrition and Dietetics, the analysis was a sex-based cohort study of participants in the ATTICA study. In ATTICA, which ran from 2001 to 2012, 1,514 mend and 1,528 women from Greece were evaluated using validated food frequency questionnaires. The analysis team looked at daily intake of vitamin D using a standardized food database, with intake divided into three tertiles. Follow-up was done in 2,020 study participants.